Jonathan I appreciate the discussion... but, I'm a bit confused by what you mean here. I am not paying miners $2.50 per transaction. The only people "paying" to operate this network are the miners, and they are paying the electric company. They decide on a case by case basis if that cost is worth it. But you and I, as participants in the network, are not paying these miners $2.50 per transaction in any way/shape/form. Please explain what you mean.
The exchange of bitcoin for fiat is the mechanism that pays the electric costs. Currenly, about $14k a day is getting paid to the electric company. That's $11k of exchange value going out the door, never to return, and an additional $3k that has to come from somewhere. Currently, it's the miners pockets and their bitcoin savings, causing additional downward pressure. Think about it! Since July the collective pool of Bitcoin owners has seen a loss of around $1.6 million dollars from electricity to secure the network. You're mistaken if you think this doesn't have an effect on the price, participation and viability of Bitcoin. Hopefully this will change soon, as structured ASICs make it to market, and mining is no longer a GPU heavy enterprise.
Am I a "libertard" because I think people shouldn't use force on each other when no crime has been committed? And you say such people "have not demonstrated sanity at any point that you can recall." Now you are resorting to both name-calling and hyperbole and that is not a good indicator that you know what you're talking about.
I've seen very foolish and very wise people discuss things on this forum, from both libertarian and statist perspectives. Saying that a certain group "hasn't demonstrated sanity at any point" is so clearly incorrect that it makes me wonder why you are trying to sabotage your own arguments?
You seem rather level headed. You make some rational points, and from your post history I can see that you hold your temper. I do resort to name calling and hyperbole, it's true. However, mine is a unique experience, and I have a bad taste in my mouth for the self serving randian libertarians. They add no value to the system, and are ideological to a fault. I don't think someone is a libertard simply because they're libertarian. I'm a libertarian, I am a capitalist, and I am also a bit of an anarchist.
Are you talking about the USD? It's lost over 96% of its value since 1913.
And it only took 100 years. In the case of bitcoin, it has taken months. This is not a good comparison, sir.
Be careful when you claim that something is not a store of value, categorically. It all depends on your time horizon. Over the past year, Bitcoin has not only been a store of value, but it's been one the best investments in the entire world. Over the past few months, it's been a terrible investment. Over the past 24 hrs, it's also been excellent as an investment.
You're conflating bitcoin here, sir. Bitcoin may be a good day trading opportunity, but for something to be a good store of value, it must demonstrate the ability to actually HOLD VALUE over some period of time. Bitcoin has not demonstrated this ability yet. At best, bitcoin is a good temporary store of value, and speculative vehicle. That is all.
So what is a better store of value? The USD which falls continually in value, or the BTC which - to this point from it's beginning - has outperformed any other asset class in the world. Certainly, the USD is far less volatile than BTC, but that is more a question of market depth and adoption. Please give the BTC a few decades at least to reach an adoption level where you could accurately gauge relative volatility between it and fiat currencies.
Stating categorically that BTC is and will never be a good store of value is hubris at best and economically foolish/flat out wrong at worst.
It has both outperformed and conversely underperformed compared to every asset class in the world. The USD is a store of value for many because it has worldwide utility. If a country wants to purchase oil from Saudi Arabia, it must do so with USD. This is an example of method of exchange building the foundation for a good store of value.
I never stated categorically that BTC will never be a good store of value. Right now, it's a horrible store of value because there is no foundation to support it, we pay too much per transaction, miners are underwater and at current, the bitcoin marketplace has as good a foundation as a wet paper towel. Again, let's fix this.
Proper valuation of an asset is comprised of many parts, but simply looking at the "current spot of the moment economy" is an insufficient basis on which to price it. The net present value component of future use is very important, and a market price far higher than today may be quite warranted depending on the future outlook.
First of all, we absolutely need a new paradigm of mining. The miners are the backbone of the network. Without them, Bitcoin ceases to function. With them, however, we collectively pay over $10k USD per day to subsidize their cost of operation to secure a network that has 40 transactions per block on average. GPU mining is a zombie, and its replacements will hopefully be here soon, with much lower electric bills!
Thankfully, free markets enable shorting of over-valued assets, and I'm glad you are contributing your price estimations via that mechanism. The BTC market is healthier for it.
I do appreciate the discussion Jonathan, you have some good things to say.
I appreciate the discussion as well, and I'll be keeping my short position for some time.
-Jonathan